SUMMARY (CLICK HERE FOR EXECUTIVE SUMMARY) On May 28, 2014, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) released sweeping new guidance that covers all companies filing under US GAAP. ASU 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers, and represents one of the most significant revisions to US Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) in its history. This could have a significant impact on many entities, particularly contractors. The FASB created Topic 606 in the Codification to house the new standard. While it would seem that moving from a rules-based approach to a principlesbased approach would simplify the revenue recognition process, the new guidance and supporting information released in ASU 2014-09 is over 700 pages long. Many CPA firms and reporting companies are still evaluating the overall impact this new guidance will have on US GAAP. The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) has created a task force to distinctively address implementation issues of ASC 606 by contractors. This group will be updating the widely used audit and accounting guides for contractors, as well as providing detailed implementation guidance for the industry. GALLINA offers below some initial guidance specifically related to construction contractors. WHY IS THE FASB DOING THIS? Revenue recognition has evolved into a complex and confusing patchwork of different rules and requirements that have been inconsistently applied and that can vary widely from industry to industry. With these new rules, the FASB has taken a clean-slate approach and developed a principles based approach that will be applicable to companies in all industries. The new standard will remove inconsistencies and weaknesses in existing requirements. It will also provide more useful information for users of financial statements through enhanced disclosure requirements. This project is part of the FASB s goal of converging US GAAP with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). Upon implementation, IFRS and US GAAP will essentially share the same guidance on revenue recognition, substantially eliminating all differences. SCOPE Specifically included within the scope of these new rules are all contracts with customers to provide goods or services in the ordinary course of business. This also includes the sale of some non-financial assets such as fixed assets and intangible assets that are not part of a company s ordinary course of business. Specifically excluded from this new guidance are lease contracts, insurance contracts, financial instruments, guarantees, and certain nonmonetary exchanges. GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 1 ]
EFFECTIVE DATE For private companies, the effective date is for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2017 (2018 for calendar-year companies). Early adoption is permitted for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2016. For public companies, the effective date is for annual and interim reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2016, no early adoption permitted. TRANSITION The new guidance allows companies to select between two transition methods: Full retrospective method a company would restate all periods presented as if they had been accounted for under ASC Topic 606 originally. Comparative periods would be restated. Retrospective application with a cumulative effect adjustment (simplified approach) a company can elect to apply ASC Topic 606 only to contracts that are in progress at the date of initial application (for example 1/1/2018 for private companies with a calendar year-end) and new contracts going forward. The cumulative adjustment to the opening balance sheet will be reflected in retained earnings. Disclosures in the financial statements will be required to explain the differences in each financial statement line item resulting from the adoption of the new guidance. Comparative periods would not need to be restated. HOW DOES IT WORK? The core principle of the new guidance is that entities should recognize revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. To provide further clarification on how to apply this principle, the FASB outlines a five step process: Step 1: Identify the contract(s) with a customer. Step 2: Identify the performance obligations in the contract. Step 3: Determine the transaction price. Step 4: Allocate the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract. Step 5: Recognize revenue when (or as) the reporting organization satisfies a performance obligation. GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 2 ]
IMPLICATIONS FOR CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTORS Initial major areas of concern for construction contractors include the following: 1. Did percentage of completion go away? 2. Can you recognize profit on uninstalled materials? 3. Will most contracts have multiple performance obligations? 4. Is cost to cost still valid in determining progress towards completion? 5. Will there be costs or billings in excess? 6. How many additional disclosures will be required? We understand the importance of providing our clients appropriate guidance in response to these questions. Advanced planning will be required. We will provide answers to the above questions in our discussion below. Due to the fact that the standard has been newly released, there will be more implementation guidance forthcoming over the next year or so. INDUSTRY SPECIFIC GUIDANCE Step 1: Identify the Contract(s) with a Customer FASB lists five criteria for the existence of a contract: Contract has commercial substance. Contract has been approved by the parties to the contract and the parties are committed to satisfying their obligations. Contract has enforceable rights regarding goods or services to be transferred Identifiable payment terms (even if amount in uncertain). Probable that entity providing goods or services will collect consideration to be received in exchange for those goods or services to be transferred to the customer. For construction contractors, entering into a written contract with a customer typically achieves the five criteria above. What happens if there is a contract modification (change order)? Change orders are accounted for differently depending on whether they are considered distinct from the original contract. Here are three potential scenarios: 1) If a change order is distinct and has a stand-alone price, it is considered a new contract and accounted for as a separate performance obligation (see below for performance obligations). 2) A change order can also be considered a continuation of a contract if the remaining goods or services are distinct from the existing contract. In this case, the remaining GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 3 ]
consideration not yet recognized under the original contract is combined with the additional consideration for the change order (essentially terminating the original contract and creating a new contract). 3) If a change order is the continuation of the contract and the goods or services are not distinct from the existing contract, the contract is accounted for as a cumulative catch up as if the change order had been in place from the inception of the contract. Keep in mind that in order for the contract price to reflect the amount of a change order, the parties need to have approved the change order, either in writing, orally, or implied by customary business practices. If the parties to the contract have not approved the change order, the contractor should not include the amount of the change order in the contract price. One of the significant changes above is the requirement for management to estimate pricing if a formal change order has not been finalized, as well as the potential adequacy of verbal and implied agreements. In many cases, this could allow recognition of claims revenue and unapproved change orders that would not have been allowable under the old guidance. Step 2: Identify Separate Performance Obligations in the Contract The new standard requires companies to determine the performance obligations in each contract. A performance obligation is a promise to deliver a good or provide a service. In order to identify performance obligations in each contract, a company needs to determine whether or not the goods or services are distinct. If distinct, a customer can benefit from the good or service on its own (the good or service is separable from the other goods or services in a contract). A good or service is not distinct if: 1) it is highly interdependent and interrelated, 2) it significantly modifies or customizes other goods and services in a contract, and 3) the company provides a significant integration service. In our experience, the majority of construction contracts provide goods or services that are highly interdependent and interrelated, which would be considered one performance obligation. For example: A contractor enters into a contract to design and build a hospital. The contractor is responsible for the design and management of the project, including engineering, construction of offices, patient rooms, a cafeteria, lab space, waiting rooms, etc. As all of these goods are interdependent and interrelated (the customer cannot benefit from each good on its own), the contract would be considered one performance obligation. GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 4 ]
Step 3: Determining the Transaction Price The transaction price is the amount of consideration a contractor expects to be entitled to in exchange for satisfying its performance obligation. For contractors, the transaction price is typically the contract price in a contract. However, what happens when there is a change in the contract value (change orders), claims, or other incentives/awards that are unknown at contract inception? The new standard identifies these items as variable consideration. Variable consideration is accounted for using either 1) the expected value approach or 2) the most likely amount approach. The method used depends which one is the most predictable of the amount the contractor is expected to receive. The most likely amount approach can also be called the all or nothing approach. For example: If the contract terms offer an incentive of $5 million for early completion of a contract, the contractor needs to determine whether it believes it will complete the contract early or not (if incentive achieved, the contractor is awarded $5 million, if not, the contractor receives nothing). The contractor should base its determination on past experience with similar contracts. It is likely that a contractor will not know whether it will meet the incentive requirements until later on during the contract. The expected value approach is the expected amount in a range of values. This usually arises during change order or claim situations. In these cases, the contractor should evaluate, based on prior experience, what it believes the outcome will be. For example: If a claim is $3 million, but the contractor believes it will receive $2 million based on prior knowledge, the transaction price can be increased by $2 million. The new standard stresses the following: Amounts are only included in the contract price if it is probable that a significant reversal in the amount of cumulative revenue recognized will not occur in the future. This new approach will require careful documentation and support to provide an audit trail for the decision making process. During the term of the contract, any significant changes in the expected revenue from the transaction would be accounted for in the current reporting period. GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 5 ]
Step 4: Allocate Transaction Price to Performance Obligations When a contractor determines a contract has more than one performance obligation, the transaction price is allocated to each performance obligation based upon an estimate of standalone selling prices of goods and services. Example: A contractor has a contract to build an airport terminal and runway for a contract price of $140 million. If the terminal and the runway are considered separate performance obligations, an estimate of the price of each stand-alone project needs to be determined: $125 million for the terminal and $25 million for the runway, for a total of $150 million on a stand-alone basis. The contract price would be allocated as follows: Terminal: Runway: ($125M / $150M) * $140M = $116.7M ($25M / $150M) * $140M = $23.3M Step 5: Recognize Revenue When (or as) Performance Obligations Are Satisfied Under the new standard, revenue is recognized upon the satisfaction of performance obligations, which occurs when control of the good or service transfers to the customer. The transfer of control can occur over time or at a point in time. More often in the construction industry, control is transferred over time. Under the new standard, control is transferred over time when at least one of the following criteria is met: A customer receives and consumes the benefits of the contractor s performance as the contractor performs. A contractor s performance creates or enhances a customer-controlled asset. An asset with an alternative use to the contractor is not created but the contractor has a right to payment for performance completed to date. A performance obligation is satisfied at a point in time if it does not meet the criteria above. Under the new standard, measuring progress towards completion is performed using one of the following methods: Input method: Recognize revenue on the basis of the contractor s efforts or inputs to the satisfaction of a performance obligation, such as labor hours, labor dollars, machine hours, costs incurred, or material quantities used, relative to the total expected inputs to the satisfaction of that performance obligation. GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 6 ]
o Note: costs incurred related to rework or wasted materials would be excluded from input measurement, as these costs do not represent the transfer of goods or services to the customer. Output method: Recognize revenue on the basis of direct measurement of the value to the customer of goods or services transferred to date relative to the remaining goods or services promised under the contract. Examples include: surveys of goods or services transferred to date, appraisals of results achieved, milestones reached, or units produced or delivered. For construction contractors, the majority of performance obligations will be measured over time as control is transferred using the input method. This is consistent with the percentage of completion method under the existing standards. Recognizing revenue for uninstalled materials: In some cases, contracts may have a significant amount of uninstalled materials for which control has not been transferred to the customer. Costs related to these uninstalled materials should be excluded from the contract, as they are not reflective of contract progress. These materials would be accounted for on the balance sheet as an inventory asset. Once the customer obtains control of the materials, revenue is recognized equal to the cost of goods transferred. Example 1 uninstalled materials: Fact pattern: 2- year contract to build a new baseball stadium for $500 million. Estimated contract costs is $400 million, including uninstalled materials of $60 million. Specifications are customized. Interim progress payments are agreed upon to coincide with job progress. Physical possession and title do not pass until completion. Contractor determined that there is one performance obligation. Contractor concludes that costs are the best measure of control transfer. At the end of year one, costs incurred are $180 million, including $60 million of uninstalled materials. The customer has not obtained control of the materials. At the end of year one, revenue is recognized as follows: Costs incurred to date: $180M Uninstalled materials: (60M)* (Asset on balance sheet) Total: $120M (Job cost) GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 7 ]
Percent complete (progress towards completion): 35% ($120M/$340M); ($340M=$400M expected costs less $60M uninstalled materials) Total contract value: $500M Uninstalled materials: (60M)* Total: $440M Progress revenue: $154M ($440M * 35%) Contract costs: (120M) Gross profit: $ 34M * Recognized on balance sheet as inventory until customer takes control of materials. When the customer obtains control of the uninstalled materials, revenue and costs totaling $60M would be recognized (i.e. no profit recognized) related to the uninstalled materials. Once control has been obtained and the revenue and costs are recognized related to the uninstalled materials, the contractor continues to recognize revenue on the basis of costs incurred to total estimated costs, excluding the revenue and costs of the uninstalled materials (similar to the calculation above). See example below. Example 2 uninstalled materials: Assuming the same facts in example 1, except the total costs incurred at the end of 18 months are $350 million, including $60 million of uninstalled materials (assume the customer obtained control of these materials at end of year one (customer has possession of materials, but materials have not been installed)). At the end of 18 months, revenue is recognized as follows: Costs incurred to date: $350M (Job cost) Uninstalled materials: (60M) Total: $290M Plus costs for uninstalled materials: 60M** Total costs: $350M Percent complete (progress towards completion): 85% ($290M/$340M); ($340M=$400 expected costs less $60M uninstalled materials) Total contract value: $500M Uninstalled materials: (60M) Total: $440M GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 8 ]
Progress revenue: $374M ($440M * 85%) Revenue on uninstalled materials: 60M** $434M Contract costs: (350M) Gross profit: $ 84M ** Upon customer taking control of materials, revenue and costs are recognized, but no profit is recognized. In this example, control transferred at end of year one. Once the materials are installed, the calculation of revenue and profit recognized would include the cost of the materials in total costs and total estimated costs. Contract Asset / Liability The new standard requires recognition of a contract asset if a contractor delivers goods or services to a customer before the customer pays consideration. A contract liability will be recognized if a customer pays consideration prior to the contractor delivering goods or services to a customer. Although the terms contract asset and contract liability are different under the new standard, the asset and liability are similar to the asset and liability recorded under existing standards, costs and estimated gross profit in excess of billings on contracts in progress and billings in excess of costs and estimated gross profit on contracts in progress. Loss Contracts (Onerous Contracts) Under the new standard, contractors would continue to accrue an anticipated loss once identified; however, the new standard does not require that losses be accrued on contracts of less than one-year duration. Contract Costs The new standard identifies certain types of costs that may need to be capitalized. Incremental costs these are costs of obtaining a contract that a contractor would not have incurred if the contract had not been obtained. These costs are recognized as assets if they are expected to be recovered and are amortized as control of goods or services to which the asset relates is transferred to the customer. If the amortization period is less than one year, these costs may be expensed as incurred (included in job costs). Costs to obtain a contract that would have been incurred regardless of whether the contract was obtained (e.g. certain bid costs) would be expensed as incurred unless the contract explicitly states they are chargeable to the customer. GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 9 ]
Contract fulfillment costs These costs could be considered fixed assets, inventory, or intangible assets. If not capitalizable under other GAAP, fulfillment costs should only be capitalized if the following criteria exist: a) costs are directly related to a specific contract, b) costs relate to future performance, and c) costs are recoverable. An example of a contract fulfillment cost is insurance/bonding and mobilization costs). Costs are amortized to contract costs as control of the goods or services is transferred. For contractors, amortization will most likely be evenly spread over the estimated contract duration. Contract fulfillment costs will need to be considered for impairment. DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS The new standard continues the FASB s recent trend of providing private reporting companies with a reduced set of disclosure requirements compared to what is required for publicly held companies. Some of the new disclosure requirements for private companies include: Revenue disaggregated according to the timing of transfer of goods or services (for example, revenue from goods or services transferred to customers at a point in time and revenue from goods or services transferred to customers over time) and qualitative information about how economic factors (such as type of customer, geographical location of customers, and type of contract) affect the nature, amount, timing, and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows. The opening and closing balances of receivables, contract assets, and contract liabilities from contracts with customers, if not otherwise separately presented or disclosed. An entity shall disclose information about its performance obligations in contracts with customers, including a description of all of the following: A. When the entity typically satisfies its performance obligations B. Significant payment terms C. The nature of the goods or services that the entity has promised to transfer, highlighting any performance obligations to arrange for another party to transfer goods or services D. Obligations for returns, refunds, and other similar obligations E. Warranties and related obligations GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 10 ]
GALLINA Can Help Correctly implementing these new standards poses a substantial undertaking for contractors. Given the broad scope of this new guidance, the practical application of it will be an evolving process over the next few years. We will be monitoring the interpretive guidance as it comes out, and will be working with our clients as to the potential implications. We will be developing an implementation tool kit as the effective date approaches, which will include sample disclosures and other interpretive guidance. The experts at GALLINA can help you and your company navigate these rules to ensure accurate reporting, and to help you get out in front of any changes that might be showing up in your financial statements. If you have any questions or you would like to see if your company might be impacted by these new revenue recognition standards, please visit our website at www.gallina.com for office locations and contact information. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY New Revenue Recognition Standard, ASU 2014-09, effective for reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2017 (calendar year 2018 for private companies). Revenue and profit recognition requirements are changing but overall methodology historically used by contractors will be relatively consistent with key differences for the following areas: o Change orders and claims o Identification of performance obligations o Uninstalled materials o Certain contract costs (incremental and fulfillment costs) New disclosures will be required in financial statements About the authors: Dana Kotarba is a Senior Manager in the firm s Walnut Creek, California office. Dana specializes in performing audits and reviews of construction companies. She is a member of the Construction Financial Management Association and is a Certified Construction Industry Financial Professional (CCIFP). Dana can be reached at (925) 943-1776 or dkotarba@gallina.com. Kyle MacLeod is a Senior Manager in the firm s Walnut Creek, California office and is a member of the GALLINA s Accounting Principles & Standards Committee. In addition to being a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Kyle is a Certified Management Accountant (CMA), and Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA), specializing in complex accounting matters. GALLINA LLP New Revenue Recognition Rules Impact Contractors [ 11 ]